June 13th, 2013: Kidd’s introductory press conference at Barclays Center. With dozens of cameras snapping and a basketball in Jason Kidd’s hand, one photographer yelled “Coach! Over here!” towards the recently retired point guard.

October 4th, 2013: The NBA officially suspended Jason Kidd for two games following a guilty plea to a DUI charge in July 2012. Joe Prunty coaches the first two games in Kidd’s absence, a decision that irks Nets assistant Lawrence Frank.

October 17th, 2013: The Nets retired Jason Kidd’s New Jersey Nets jersey in the Barclays Center rafters. We remarked on the irony of it all.

November 3rd, 2013: Jason Kidd coaches his first game ever after serving his two-game suspension. The Nets lose 107-86.

November 15th, 2013: After a rough start, ESPN’s David Thorpe calls Jason Kidd “The worst coach in the NBA.” Four days later, a scout told Howard Beck of Bleacher Report that Kidd “doesn’t do anything,” and that Lawrence Frank is the one making most of the decisions.

November 19th, 2013: Someone makes this.

November 26th, 2013: The Nets won a game. Jason Kidd couldn’t believe it.

December 21th, 2013: The Nets lose Brook Lopez for the season with a broken foot, making Kidd’s first season look snakebitten and leaving the team in disarray.

December 26th, 2013: Following a loss that dropped the Nets to 9-19, an exasperated Jason Kidd calls out his team in the locker room for a lack of effort and heart, according to an ESPN report.

December 27th, 2013: Kidd suspends center Andray Blatche from the team for four games, hiding the suspension under “personal reasons,” due to Blatche’s lack of preparedness and conditioning. Blatche returns to the team on January 4th.

January 2nd, 2014: Kidd stops wearing ties. The team surges.

January 16th, 2014: As the Nets begin their 2014 turnaround, Nets owner Mikhail Prokhorov backs Kidd as coach, noting that he was getting more “comfortable” in the role.

May 14th, 2014: The Nets season ends, in a second-round loss to the Miami Heat in five games. Kidd’s final postseason record in Brooklyn: 5-7.

June 21st, 2014: A rumor leaks from the Nets organization that the Nets are looking at a trade that would send Jarrett Jack to the Nets for Marcus Thornton. Later, it’s discovered that Kidd believed Jack was an upgrade over Thornton, and wanted the team to trade for Jack instead of Thornton at the trade deadline. The Nets and Cavaliers ended up completing the Thornton-for-Jack trade anyway after Kidd’s departure, in a deal that let the Cavaliers clear enough cap room to sign LeBron James.

June 25th, 2014: Billy King says he has no expectations that the team’s coaching staff will undergo any changes.

June 27th, 2014: The Nets unveil their new practice facility, with Kidd on hand, in Brooklyn. Kidd calls the organization “first class.” The team’s official release to the public says “with a healthy Lopez and Williams, and a second season under coach Jason Kidd, the Nets believe they have the talent and continuity to be an elite team.”

June 28th, 2014: The New York Post reports that Kidd went above GM Billy King’s head, demanding a job overseeing basketball operations in addition to his role as head coach from the front office. When denied, Kidd was given permission to speak with the Milwaukee Bucks about their vacant head coaching job, and was not expected back with the Nets in any capacity. “The Russians are done with him,” one report says.

June 30th, 2014: The Nets & Bucks come to an agreement to send Kidd to the Bucks as their head coach for two second-round draft picks. Bucks coach Larry Drew is fired. Kidd’s tenure as Nets coach lasts a total of 382 days.